Thursday, January 17, 2013

Blended Learning and Whole-Person Learning


What is Blended Learning?


We've all been hearing a lot of talk about online, blended learning, and I've been scouring the internet finding definitions for it and seeing how it's being implemented in different schools. This week, I had an opportunity to attend a two-hour conference blended learning, and doing so confirmed some of the thoughts I've been having about it.

First, let's define terms. Here is Penn State's definition of blended learning, which Wikipedia picked up:


A blended learning approach combines face to face classroom methods with computer-mediated activities to form an integrated instructional approach. 

The goal of a blended approach is to join the best aspects of both face to face and online instruction. Classroom time can be used to engage students in advanced interactive experiences.  

This is the link to the Penn State website on its blended learning philosophy:
What is Blended Learning?

Three Models of Blended Learning


Three models for blended learning seem to be popular in elementary and high school environments:

Rotation: Lab
Rotation: Classroom
Flex

To learn more about these three models, go to the following site:

Blended Learning Models

The blended learning models discussed on the Education Elements site are being implemented in a formal and well conceived manner, but if you're a teacher using digital media in any way, you're probably also experimenting with and/or implementing blended learning in your classroom, in ways that particularly enrich your curriculum.

Blended Learning in the High School Classroom


For example, I'm blending my AP Art History course this year, so I can teach chronologically in the classroom, but have students become familiar in my class blog with upcoming eras, various artists and styles, and non-Western art I may not have time to get to in the curriculum. Here is a link to a blog post that has students consider the effects of the Classical world in art. I gave the assignment to my students once we had studied the Greco-Roman time period, and now I know that when we get to time periods such as the Renaissance, the Neo-Classical era, Modernism and postmodernism, students will have prior knowledge I can activate:

The Greco-Roman World Lives On and On and On . . .


IMHO


Some of the educators I've spoken to who are interested in blended learning are intrigued by it partly because the formal model of it has been touted as economically friendly. Before investing in the expense of "going blended," I'd like to offer my humble opinion.

In any presentation you're going to hear about blended learning, I can guarantee you that you're going to be shown a chart of Bloom's Taxonomy:

Then you're going to be told that blended learning allows a teacher to develop higher order thinking rather than focus on remembering and understanding. The plan with blended learning is that once students complete  their online learning, some form of software with course content that gives teachers data about student performance, they will then be ready for small-group instruction. During small-group instruction, the teacher can spend time asking students to apply and analyze what they've learned, and then students can work in groups to evaluate their new knowledge and create original content with it. I love that last part. I definitely want to see more project-based learning in schools.

These are my impressions:


As an English teacher, I'm intrigued by the notion that I can use software that will force students to italicize the name of a play or novel or capitalize only proper nouns, before they can advance to the next grammatical exercise. I'm so sick of teaching the same grammar lesson over and over, only to have students completely ignore a rule they learned on the next assignment they hand in. Teaching grammar is a Groundhog Day nightmare for me.

I'm also interested in having data about students' knowledge of grammar and of their ability to create sound arguments that they must back up with sufficient evidence. This data is attainable through the ELA software programs developed for online, blended learning, and having the computer do some of the dirty work of the English Language Arts classroom sounds delightful.

My problem lies in the way the blended learning model is being developed. When I asked at the conference I attended what kind of interdisciplinary lessons are being implemented in the blended learning models being touted, the reply was none.

Therefore, while the blended learning model is offering a lot of new data that teachers can get excited about, time for whole-body learning, and perhaps a price point that is appealing as well, educationally it may not be offering the whole-person learning experience that I think should be at the center of education today.

Whole-Person Learning


Here is an article from the New York Times about a physics teacher from Louisville, Kentucky named Jeffrey Wright who says the following:


“When you look at physics, it’s all about laws and how the world works . . . But if you don’t tie those laws into a much bigger purpose, the purpose in your heart, then they [students] are going to sit there and ask the question ‘Who cares?’
“Kids are very spiritual — they want a bigger purpose. . . . "

For the rest of this inspiring article about Mr. Wright and his inventive approach to teaching physics as well as the affecting lesson he gives his students on his struggles with his own developmentally-challenged son, click on the link:

Laws of Physics Can't Trump the Bonds of Love

We must engage the whole child, and we cannot do so if we continue to set up courses as discrete units that don't have relevance to and interact with each other. My job as Coordinator of Interdisciplinary Studies is to create those connections among the students' classes, so that students not only see that one class is necessary for an understanding of another, but that all their classes connect to who they are as human beings and will help them understand what their higher purpose in the world is.

If we remain on an educational course that doesn't plan for those larger aims from the onset of the curriculum planning process, then students may or may not be lucky enough to have a Mr. Wright in their lives, and their formation as whole people will be a rockier process or may never happen satisfactorily at all. In a religious school such as Frisch, where I teach, the creation of meaning and religious purposefulness is crucial in curriculum development, but Mr. Wright shows that all people yearn for meaning in their lives. We all want to feel that what we do has a higher purpose, and students deserve a way to be shown that the interests and passions they have can be used to make a positive difference on this planet.

Let's be honest, when we read any article about good teachers, you know, the ones all students love and people make after-school specials about, we know that those are the ones who are thinking about students as whole people and not just as containers to hold math, history or science knowledge. So anyone in education today has to make sure that we create a system where students are engaged in whole-body and whole-person learning, what my son Solomon, a junior at Frisch, calls, respectively, "physical" and "spiritual" learning.

Therefore, my conclusion about blended learning for now is that it is a tool. It's an interesting tool with a lot of potential, but the potential must be harnessed correctly by thoughtful educators.


To end, I'll quote one of the current sages in the field of education reform, Will Richardson:

"Learning without love isn’t learning; it's production."

Let's make sure our students love what they learn, learn what they love, and learn to love while they learn.


Additional Resources:



For more information on interdisciplinary studies, see below:

My colleague Rabbi Tzvi Pittinsky sent me this article from Edutopia on interdisciplinary studies, which explains how integration among subjects allows for deeper learning:

Deeper Learning: Why Cross-Curricular Teaching is Essential

Finally, to find out more about my work in interdisciplinary studies, click on the following link:

Trying to Teach Well and Good: About My Work


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